ThinkUp is an open source project mostly built by volunteers, who troubleshoot and discuss features
in public community spaces. If you’ve found a ThinkUp bug or have an idea for a new feature, here’s what you can do
to get help or feedback most efficiently.

ThinkUp’s issue tracker is public, but you shouldn’t file a new
issue unless the problem or feature request has been
confirmed by the ThinkUp community. If you file a new issue without discussing it with the community, no one but Gina
will receive the new issue notification. If she cannot reproduce the bug or isn’t sold on the feature pitch, she
will close the issue. There’s a better chance someone in the community at large will be able to reproduce your problem
or get excited about your feature.

Instead of filing a new issue, discuss the problem/idea with the community first to confirm it is indeed a new issue
and not a known bug, a rejected feature idea or an environmental problem versus an application code bug.

If you’ve got an idea for a new ThinkUp feature, we invite you to pull the source code and start
building! If you’re not a coder, the better you pitch your feature idea to the
community, the more likely an interested developer will work on it.

To pitch your feature idea, describe exactly how you think the new functionality should work, and include wireframes and
screenshots. Sell your idea to the community by clearly explaining its benefits and use cases, and how you plan to
help make the feature. We only build features which align with ThinkUp’s purpose.

Thanks for helping us make ThinkUp a great application, and for respecting the community’s time and public spaces.